Becker can serve out the terms of probation in Ohio, where he wrote on his now-deleted Facebook he planned to attend college.

The University of Dayton, where Becker listed as the school he planned to attend, tweeteed on Monday: "David Becker will not be attending the University of Dayton as a student this year."

Becker is also not required to register as a sex offender.

"We all made mistakes when we were 17, 18, 19 years old, and we shouldn't be branded for life with a felony offense and branded a sex offender," Rooke said. "Putting this kid in jail for two years would have destroyed this kid's life."

Many were outraged to learn of Becker’s sentence, taking to social media to vent their frustrations at the perceived leniency afforded to young men accused of sexual assault.

“Of course, we wouldn't want his youthful mistake to haunt him for the rest of his life like, yanno(sic), his F****** VICTIMS,” one person wrote on Facebook.

“This crap makes me want to scream,” another person wrote. “How are there so many judges that think rape isn't a big deal?!”

Another posted: “Let's introduce yet another rapist to the world. It seems people (kids, and judges alike) have learned little from Brock Turner. More raping of drunk girls. More 'privilege acquittals.’”

Turner, a former Stanford student and athlete, was sentenced to six months in June for sexually assaulting a woman behind a dumpster. He had faced a minimum of two years for the three felonies he was convicted of, but Santa Clara County Judge Aaron Persky cited his youth and lack of a criminal record in his considerably light sentence.

Persky, who continues to face a slew of criticism for the lenient sentence handed down to Turner, recused himself last week from making his first major decision in another sex case, filing a ruling that he saw publicity about a child pornography case that would compromise his impartiality, Mercury News reported.